WEBVTT POINT. THEIR NAMES HAVE NOT YET BEEN RELEASED. >> IT'S 911, IS EVERYTHING OKAY? >> THE 911 CALL FROM THIS TOWN HOME BEGAN WITH SCREAMING. YOU CAN HEAR MOVEMENT AND TALKING. >> IN THE BEGINNING OF THE CALL IT SOUNDED LIKE SOMEONE DIALED 911 AND SOMEONE CAME AND SCREAMED MOM AND HELP OVER AND OVER AGAIN. >> A CRY FOR HELP, REPEATED AT LEAST 13 TIMES. >> SHE WASN'T ABLE TO COMMUNICATE SPECIFICALLY WHAT SHE NEEDED OR WHAT THE PROBLEM WAS. >> WHEN OFFICERS ARRIVED ON THE SCENE ON GELHOT DRIVE THE DOOR WAS LOCKED. THEY HEARD COMMOTION. >> THERE WAS A LOT OF MOVEMENT UPSTAIRS. I HEAR CRASHING. >> AT THAT TIME, THEY FORCED ENTRY INTO THE APARTMENT. MADE THEIR WAY TO AN UPSTAIRS BATHROOM WHERE THEY ENCOUNTERED A MALE AND FEMALE. >> THE MAN WAS STABBING THE WOMAN. ONE OF HIS OFFICERS OPENED FIRE. >> SHOTS FIRED. >> OFFICER BRYAN CARNES, THE FIRST OFFICER TO MAKE IT TO THE BATHROOM. FIRED SEVERAL ROUNDS FROM HIS PISTOL STRIKING THE MALE AND STOPPING THE IMMEDIATE THREAT. >> THE MAN WAS PRONOUNCED DEAD AT THE SCENE. THE WOMAN WAS TRANSPORTED TO MERCY FAIRFIELD WHERE SHE DIED. TIM LIVES TWO BUILDINGS DOWN. >> I WOKE UP TO ALL THE POLICE AND AMBULANCES. >> FOLLOWED BY THREE BUREAU OF CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION UNITS. BCI IS LEADING THIS INVESTIGATION AND SPENT ALL DAY PROCESSING THE SCENE. >> IT'S VERY TRAUMATIC FOR THE OFFICERS INVOLVED, EVERYBODY INVOLVED. >> OFFICER CARNES HAS BEEN WITH THE FAIRFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT FOR THREE YEARS. I DID GET A CHANCE TO LOOK AT HIS LAST EVALUATION AND IT WAS NOTED IN THERE THAT HIS KNOWLEDGE OF HIS JOB IS ABOVE AVERAGE FOR AN OFFICER WITH THIS EXPERIENCE. THERE IS BODY CAM FOOTAGE OF

The incident happened around 6 a.m. at the Rolling Meadows condominium complex in the 1500 block of Gelhot Drive on Friday.

Dispatchers received a call from a woman who claimed she needed help. In the 911 call, she can be heard yelling for help more than a dozen times.

Dispatcher relayed what they heard to officers, who were sent to the scene.

"It sounds like a lot of movement and there's talking in the distance, background. In the beginning of the call, it sounded like someone dialed 911 and then someone came and grabbed the phone and screamed, 'Mom' and screamed, 'Help,' over and over again," a dispatcher said.

The first officer at the scene told dispatchers that he heard the cry for help.

"I've got someone screaming inside. We gotta get the ram to get the door open," the officer said. "There's a lot of movement upstairs. I hear crashing and stuff."

Officers forced their way in and found Williamson stabbing Henry in an upstairs bathroom, Maynard said.

"Officer Bryan Carnes, who was the first officer to make it to the bathroom, fired several rounds from his pistol, striking the male and stopping the immediate threat," Maynard said.

Williamson was pronounced dead at the scene.

Henry was transported to the hospital, where she was later pronounced dead.

According to Fairfield police, Carnes, a three-year veteran of the Fairfield Police Department, and his supervisor, Sgt. Aaron Meyer, were placed on administrative leave. That's standard procedure when an incident such as this occurs.

Meyer was at the scene at the time of the shooting.

In a recent evaluation, Carnes was said to be "an asset to this department." It was also noted in his evaluation that his "knowledge of his job is above average for an officer of his experience."

The investigation has been handed over to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation.